The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Emails show Clinton campaign attention to black voters

- By Darlene Superville

WASHINGTON >> Hacked emails from the personal account of Hillary Clinton’s top campaign official show some of the attention her team paid to courting black voters.

There were worries about Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ appeal to that historical­ly Democratic voter group. There was angst over whether Clinton should give a major speech on race relations. Meanwhile, a South Carolina Democratic Party official voiced concerns that Clinton hadn’t visited a particular region of the state.

The emails were among hundreds released Saturday by WikiLeaks. The notes were stolen from the email account of John Podesta, the Clinton campaign’s chairman, as part of a series of high-profile computer hacks of Democratic targets that U.S. intelligen­ce officials say were orchestrat­ed by Russia, with the intent to influence the Nov. 8 election.

It was impossible to authentica­te each hacked email that WikiLeaks published, but Democrats have openly acknowledg­ed they were hacked and have not pointed to any specific case where an email was altered to inflict political damage.

SPEECH ON RACE

Clinton’s campaign debated the merits of whether she should give a major speech on race.

Her chief speechwrit­er, Dan Schwerin, emailed Podesta, communicat­ions director Jennifer Palmieri and others in February 2016 to say that, as conceived, the speech would demonstrat­e Clinton’s “sustained and comprehens­ive commitment” to improving race relations and her lifelong sympathy toward the plight of minorities in the U.S.

Both Bill Clinton and candidate Clinton were clear that the speech shouldn’t be “a big mea culpa,” but the former president also said “we shouldn’t try to defend the indefensib­le.”

Schwerin went on to say that adviser Minyon Moore had raised tough questions about the wisdom of making the speech because it could “unintentio­nally end up elevating questions that aren’t yet being widely asked and introduce new damaging informatio­n, especially super predator, to a lot more voters.”

In a 1996 speech about Bill Clinton’s crime bill when she was first lady, Hillary Clinton described young people in gangs as “super-predators.”

Some blacks find the term offensive and have sought during the campaign to hold her accountabl­e for it. Hillary Clinton has said she regrets using the term.

After a “gut check” conversati­on with Moore and subsequent talks with policy advisers Jake Sullivan and Maya Harris, Schwerin says in the email that the campaign hierarchy is “mostly persuaded” by Moore’s concerns. Instead, a decision to push the Supreme Court nomination issue could replace the race speech.

Schwerin ultimately closes his memo with the idea that “if we’re slipping fast, maybe it’s worth rolling the dice and doing the speech. If we’re holding relatively steady, maybe we see if we can ride this out without doing the speech.”

Clinton talks about race and the need to improve race relations in her campaign appearance­s, but has not given a major speech on the subject.

PEE DEE REGION

In an apparent effort to court young African-American voters in South Carolina’s Pee Dee region, Hillary Clinton staffers promised Jamie Harrison, the state’s Democratic Party chairman, that his area would not be overlooked by Clinton. They also offered up some bold names in black entertainm­ent who could stump for votes.

In a Jan. 28, 2016, email, Brynne Craig, deputy director of State Campaigns for Hillary for America, summarizes a conversati­on with Harrison, who is unhappy that Clinton hasn’t visited the Pee Dee region, the northeaste­rn corner of the state and about 100 miles east of Columbia, the state capital.

Craig says he assured Harrison that such a visit is a top priority for the former first lady, or her husband, former President Bill Clinton. (Clinton visited the region in late February and later won the state’s Democratic presidenti­al primary.)

Craig says Harrison also mentioned the need to bring younger surrogates into the state, not just well-known, older politicos. He says he offered Harrison a partial list of black entertaine­rs they’ve asked to travel to the state, including singer Usher, actors Anthony Anderson and Gabrielle Union, and athletes Alonzo Mourning and Grant Hill.

Craig says, “I feel confident we will be able to increase the amount of surrogates we have in South Carolina — more importantl­y the RIGHT kind.”

BERNIE SANDERS

Clinton’s campaign worried about Bernie Sanders’ appeal to black voters, a key Democratic constituen­cy that Clinton counted on.

In a July 2015 email, Podesta frets to other campaign staffers about Sanders, who had challenged Clinton for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination all the way through to the end of the primary process.

The Vermont senator had built his campaign around an anti-Wall Street, anti-establishm­ent message with strong appeal to progressiv­es

 ?? NATI HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, the Keystone Steele City pumping station, into which the planned Keystone XL pipeline is to connect to, is seen in Steele City, Neb. Hacked emails show Hillary Clinton’s campaign wrestled with how to announce her opposition to...
NATI HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, the Keystone Steele City pumping station, into which the planned Keystone XL pipeline is to connect to, is seen in Steele City, Neb. Hacked emails show Hillary Clinton’s campaign wrestled with how to announce her opposition to...

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